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Children Empowerment on Addressing Climate Change

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December 13, 2018

Why in news?

Schoolchildren in Australia had demonstrated on the streets against their government’s lackluster response to climate change.

What are the demands of the Australian children?

  • Australian children have been studying environment science in their regular curriculum.
  • It specifically refers to the dangers of global warming and the impending disasters associated with climate change.
  • But in addition to the curriculum, direct experience of endemic forest fires impelled adolescent minds in Australia to mount public protests.
  • The children’s demonstration stated that, over the recent years Australia has experienced dire consequences of global warming.
  • Due to this the children face dropping of their school routine on a working day.
  • They were conveying the feeling that natural catastrophe would make academic attainment meaningless.
  • Several student claims articulated specific demands, which includes the closure of a new coal mining projects.

What was the government’s response on the demonstration?

  • Children’s mass protest received sharp reactions from Australian ruling administration.
  • Australian Prime Minister responded that students should focus on learning and avoid activism.
  • Other pro government supports claimed that students should be learning about geology and mining rather than protesting on streets.
  • Global leaders see climate change as an irritating discourse, they also think it has no substance or truth.
  • These leaders believe that no goal should override high industrial and economic growth.
  • As for the threat of climate change, these leaders deny it and blame activist scientists for creating and spreading a myth.

What are the issues in understanding climate change?

  • A basic lesson in geography in elementary schools across the world concerns the distinction between ‘climate’ and ‘weather’.
  • The two concepts are typically explained as being different in terms of changeability.
  • Weather changes from day to day and season to season, according to standard geography texts.
  • Climate, on the other hand, refers to a permanent frame within we study change in weather conditions.
  • So, the term ‘climate’ is used for classifying the world and each country in zones, these zones constitute the permanent lore of learning.
  • It is intellectually challenging for many people to reconcile this notion of climate with the idea of climate change that the UN is using to warn people against terrible environmental disasters.
  • Apart from this the sustainable development goals promoted by UNESCO have been included in the school syllabus across Asia, but their presence is merely nominal in most countries.
  • Policy documents include environmental concerns, but priorities economic growth.
  • In the context of globalization, most countries propagate competitive nationalism.
  • It is used as a major ground for regimentation of children’s bodies and minds in order to ensure that they become proud, loyal citizens.

What the Australian demonstrations emphasizes?

  • The Australian children who registered their protest on city streets feel more sensitive than Australia’s political leaders to the threat of climate change.
  • The reason perhaps lies in the nexus between politics and economic interests.
  • All environmental struggles are caught in sharply divided goals of popular politics and people’s right to live in a safe and sustainable environment.
  • Those who espouse environmental causes are often seen as romantics while people who support fast economic growth based on rapid industrialization are perceived as practical realists.
  • Australian children have rejected this view and figured out that the term ‘climate change’ means little to their political leaders.
  • The Australian children made it clear that they have no financial investments to be redeemed by deeper mining for coal or building taller apartment blocks.

 

Source: The Hindu

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